Dear colleagues,

On behalf of my co-authors, I'd like to draw your attention to a recently
published article on ringed seal foraging behaviour.

Milaja Nykänen, Marja Niemi, Vincent Biard, Matt I. D. Carter, Enrico
Pirotta and Mervi Kunnasranta. 2025. Linking ringed seal foraging behaviour
to environmental variability. Movement Ecology 13: 31.
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40462-025-00555-4

*Abstract*

*Background:* Foraging rates directly influence animals’ energetic intake
and expenditure and are thus linked to body condition and the ability to
survive and reproduce. Further, understanding the underlying processes
driving a species’ behaviour and habitat use is important as changes in
behaviour could result from changes in environmental conditions.
*Methods: *In this study, the dives of Saimaa ringed seals (Pusa hispida
saimensis) were classified for the first time using hidden Markov models
and telemetry data collected on individual dives, and the behavioural
states of the diving seals were estimated. In addition, we used generalized
additive mixed models on the foraging probability of the seals to identify
environmental and temporal drivers of foraging behaviour.
*Results:* We inferred three (in winter) or four (in summer) different dive
types: sleeping/resting dives, shallow inactive dives, transiting dives and
foraging dives, based on differences in dive metrics logged by or derived
from data from telemetry tags. Long and relatively deep sleeping/resting
dives were missing entirely in the winter, compensated by an increased
proportion of time used for haul-out. We found profound differences in the
behaviour of Saimaa ringed seals during the open water season compared to
the ice-covered winter, with the greatest proportion of time allocated to
foraging during the summer months (36%) and the lowest proportion in the
winter (21%). The seals’ foraging probability peaked in summer (July) and
was highest during the daytime during both summer and winter months.
Moreover, foraging probability was highest at lake depths of 7–30 m in the
winter and at depths > 15 m in the summer. We also found some evidence of
sex-specific foraging strategies that are adapted seasonally, with females
preferring more sheltered water areas during winter.
*Conclusions:* We suggest that the foraging behaviour of Saimaa ringed
seals is largely influenced by diel vertical movements and availability of
fish, and that the seals optimize their energy acquisition while conserving
energy, especially during the cold winter months. Further, the seals
display some flexibility in foraging strategies, a feature that may help
this endangered subspecies to cope with the ongoing climate change.

The article is freely available at:
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40462-025-00555-4

All the best,
Milaja

-- 
Dr Milaja Nykänen
Post-doctoral researcher

University of Eastern Finland

Saimaa ringed seal research

Department of Environmental and Biological Sciences

PO Box 111

FI-80101 Joensuu
Finland
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